“Developers in that area are crying out for a gas connection,” he said.

“We will continue to look for appropriate sites for the daughter station, but Marong has limited industrial land and it requires an area with B-double access, power connection and telecommunications.”

The daughter station was proposed for a block of land on the Calder Highway bordered by Landry Lane and the Marong caravan park.

Mr Himson said the company will appeal in the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal, with the matter set for April. In the meantime, TasGas will continue to work with council to find an alternative location.

The gas rollout, designed by the former Coalition government, involves trucking gas to areas without a natural gas connection. The gas is then stored in a daughter station, to be circulated through the town.

Council officers recommended that the station be approved, but councillors voted against the motion.

The decision, moved by Cr Matt Emond, states the daughter station would be an “inappropriate use of the land” and it would have an “adverse impact” on the character of Marong and the caravan park.

While Marong waits for a natural gas connection, other central Victorian towns will soon be able to connect.

More than 670 premises in Heathcote will be able to connect to natural gas by the end of this month. A public meeting will be held in the town on Thursday night.

The connection will also be complete in Maldon at the end of October, and the first connections are expected soon after.

They were among 11 Victorian towns included in the rollout of natural gas.